Flood Certification Fee
A fee for determining whether your property is in a federal flood zone.
Flood certification is required by federal law for any property securing a mortgage from a federally-regulated lender. The cost is small and standardized.
Worked examples
Real numbers for common scenarios. These are estimates - your final closing disclosure will reflect the exact fees your specific loan and property require.
Scenario
Reading Flood Certification Fee on a Loan Estimate
Inputs
- Where it appears
- Section A or Section B, page 2
- Typical range
- $15 to $25
- Negotiable?
- No. Mandatory for all federally-related mortgages.
Estimate
- Action to take
- Get 2-3 Loan Estimates and compare this exact line
- Red flag check
- When over $30.
Always look at total Section A on the Loan Estimate, not individual line items in isolation.
Run your own numbers
The calculator gives you the same itemized breakdown for any price, down payment, loan type, and location.
Open the calculatorFrequently asked questions
Is the flood certification fee negotiable?+
No. Mandatory for all federally-related mortgages. The fastest way to negotiate it down is to bring a competing Loan Estimate from another lender that either doesn't charge it or charges less. Lenders price-match on closing fees regularly.
What's a fair flood certification fee?+
Typical range is $15 to $25. Anything outside that range deserves a question to your loan officer about what it's actually paying for.
How should I actually compare two mortgage lenders?+
Get a full Loan Estimate from each on the same loan amount, same lock period, same close date. Compare APR (not rate), Section A (origination charges), Section B (services you can't shop for), and Section J (total estimated closing costs). Most surface-level comparisons miss that one lender is quoting points and the other isn't.
Why don't advertised rates match what I get on a Loan Estimate?+
Advertised rates almost always assume a perfect-credit borrower paying discount points to buy the rate down. The actual rate you're quoted reflects your credit score, loan-to-value, occupancy, property type, lock period, and whether you're paying points. APR is the closer apples-to-apples number.
Is one lender always better?+
No. Pricing is competitive, fees vary by file, and lender strengths differ by product (FHA, VA, jumbo, non-QM, conforming). The right answer is to get 3 to 4 Loan Estimates and pick the one with the best total-cost number for your specific loan.
All numbers shown are estimates for planning purposes. Closing costs, taxes, and fees vary by lender, title company, county, and individual transaction. LoanElk is not a lender, broker, or financial advisor. Your final Loan Estimate and Closing Disclosure are the authoritative figures.